Recommend Plant Signaling & Behavior (PS&B) to your librarian for 2008. Download form here.

Sign up for Table of Contents Alerts!

home subscribe search archive forthcoming

PS&B is the official journal of the Society for Plant Neurobiology. Full membership ($60 annually) and student membership ($30 annually) include online access to the journal. Click here to join.

Email this page Print this page

Mini Review

The power of functional proteomics: Components of the green algal eyespot and its light signaling pathway(s)

Volker Wagner, Georg Kreimer and Maria Mittag

volume 3 | issue 7

july 2008
Pages: 433 - 435

Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $79/year

One of the key modifications of proteins that can affect protein functions, activities, stabilities, localizations and interactions, represents phosphorylation. For functional phosphoproteomics, phosphopeptides are enriched from isolated sub-cellular fractions of interest and analyzed by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. Such an approach was recently applied to the eyespot apparatus of the green flagellate alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which represents a primordial visual system. Thereby, 32 phosphoproteins of known eyespot proteins along with 52 precise in vivo phosphorylation sites were identified. They include enzymes of carotenoid and fatty acid metabolism, (putative) light signaling components and proteins with unknown function. Strikingly, the two unique green algal photoreceptors, channelrhodopsin-1 and -2 were found to be phosphorylated in the cytoplasmic loop next to their seven transmembrane regions in a similar distance as observed in vertebrate rhodopsins.

Authors

Volker Wagner

Institut für Allgemeine Botanik und Pflanzenphysiologie; Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena; Jena, Germany

Georg Kreimer

Institut für Biologie, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen; Erlangen, Germany

Maria Mittag

Institut für Allgemeine Botanik und Pflanzenphysiologie; Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena; Jena, Germany


Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $79/year